UCSB's PAUL AMAR WINS A "BEST BOOK" AWARD AT AMERICAN POLITICAL SCIENCE ASSOCIATION

Award Recipient: 

Paul Amar

Award Date: 

Tuesday, September 2, 2014

At the recent American Political Science Association convention in Washington, DC (August 28-31), Paul Amar's book "The Security Archipelago" won the Charles Taylor Book Award. This prize is for the "best book in political science that employs or develops interpretive methodologies and methods," and is selected by the Interpretive Methods and Methodologies Section of the APSA.

Below is the text of the speech read by Robert Adcock (of George Washington University) who presented Professor Amar with the award at the ceremony:

"Paul Amar's Security Archipelago exemplifies the rich and innovative potential of interpretive methods and methodology in comparative and transnational research. Bringing together events, practices, and discourses in the global cities of Rio and Cairo, from the landmark United Nations summits held in these cities (in 1992 and 1994, respectively) to the present, Amar interweaves fascinating empirical detail and provocative meta-reflection on the trajectories and paradoxes of militarism, humanitarianism and sexuality politics in our global age. His book especially stands out for the Taylor award due to its self-reflexive, creative and confident crafting and pursuit of what Amar terms his archipelago method. With this method Amar brings his cases together in a multitude of ways: from charting similarities and differences between cultural heritage urban planning projects in each city, to exploring implications of the structural position of both cities in semiperipheral states, to following transnational flows of security practices and humanitarian rescue discourses, to persuasively interpreting the two cities as generative sites of new forms of human-security power and governance. Moreover, Amar skillfully integrates his rich array of comparative moves to advance an invigorating metanarrative that aims to displace narratives of neoliberalism with his own novel narrative of a move from liberalization to securitization. This narrative situates the Global South as the center, rather than the recipient or resister, of global trends, and reintegrates events of the 9/11 decade within flows and trajectories that reach from preceding events of the 1990s up to compelling readings of contemporary events, especially the 2011 Egyptian revolution."

The Security Archipelago: Human-Security States, Sexuality Politics, and the End of Neoliberalism